Former leading New Zealand publisher and bookseller, and widely experienced judge of both the Commonwealth Writers Prize and the Montana New Zealand Book Awards, talks about what he is currently reading, what impresses him and what doesn't, along with chat about the international English language book scene, and links to sites of interest to booklovers.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Bill Bryson urges e-book bundle tie-up

By Ian YoungsArts reporter,
BBC News

Bill Bryson said buying e-books made him feel guilty
because he was not supporting bookshops

Author Bill Bryson has called on
publishers to give away e-books when people buy the printed versions in order to
boost sales of physical books.

The travel writer said he resented being "forced" to choose digital books
over print because e-books were more convenient to take on the road."It would be such a terrible thing to lose physical books," he told BBC
News."That's the direction we're heading in because publishers are not responding
as effectively as they ought to."The "solution to the industry's malaise" is to give buyers a free download
code when they buy a printed book, he said.His comments come weeks after Amazon announced a plan
to offer buyers of printed books in the US a free or discounted digital version.
Similar schemes have been rolled out for magazines and music."If they [publishers] don't move to that really quickly people will be forced
to take the digital version whether they really want to or not," Bryson
said."Somebody gave me a digital reader as a gift last spring and I now find that
when I'm travelling I take digital books with me.

"I'd like to possess both versions but I'm forced by the
book world to choose one or the other, and sometimes I'm being forced to take
digital books.

"I've nothing against digital books but I want both. I'm being forced to make
the choice and I feel that by buying a digital book I'm not supporting a
bookshop, I'm not supporting the physical book and that makes me feel
guilty."I'm being forced into that and I kind of resent it."

Bryson was speaking at the Booksellers Association conference ahead of the
publication of his latest book, One Summer: America 1927.More